Description

Book Synopsis

National Jewish Book Awards Winner of the Mimi S. Frank Award in Memory of Becky Levy for Sephardic Culture, 2012.

Early modern Amsterdam was a prosperous city renowned for its relative tolerance, and many people hoping for a better future, away from persecution, wars, and economic malaise, chose to make a new life there. Conversos and Jews from many countries were among them, attracted by the reputed wealth and benevolence of the Portuguese Jews who had settled there. Behind the facade of prosperity, however, poverty was a serious problem. It preoccupied the leadership of the Portuguese Jewish community and influenced its policy on admitting newcomers: the struggle to keep poverty under control and ensure that finances were available for welfare was paramount.

Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld looks at poverty and welfare from the perspective of both benefactors and recipients. She analyses benefactors’ motives for philanthropy and charts its dimensions; she also examines the decision-making processes of communal bodies and private philanthropists, identifying the cultural influences that shaped their commitment to welfare. At the same time her detailed study succeeds in bringing the poor to life: she examines what brought them to Amsterdam, aspects of their daily life in the petitions they sent to the different welfare institutions, and the survival strategies offered by work, education, and charity. She also considers the related questions of social mobility and the motivation of the poor for joining the Amsterdam Portuguese community. Her research takes her, finally, beyond the margins of the established community to the small but active groups of Sephardi bandits who formed their own clandestine networks. Special attention is also paid to poor women, whether arriving alone or left behind and sometimes heading small family units, who were often singled out for relief. In this way the book makes a much-needed contribution to the study of gender, in Jewish society and more generally.

This ground-breaking, multi-faceted study of the dynamics of the relationship between the rich and the poor adds a nuanced new dimension to our understanding of Jewish life in the early modern period.



Trade Review
'This volume offers the first systematic study of the poor and poor relief among the Sephardi Jews of early modern Amsterdam. It is a rich, thorough, and often touching exploration of the topic, and goes far in correcting the impression that all Jews in this community belonged to wealthy merchant families. Levie Bernfeld has given a voice to a largely silent but important population, in a work of meticulous scholarship.'
Miriam Bodian

'The wealthiest Jewish community in the early modern period has finally received a comprehensive and detailed study of its poor, based on a meticulous analysis of a broad variety of sources. Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld has painted a colourful and fascinating historical portrait of the poor and ordinary people of the Sephardic community of Amsterdam, with their social and cultural profile, their distress, and the ways that the community leadership and its social elite dealt with their disturbing presence. This is one of the most important contributions in recent years to historical research on Dutch Jewry as well as on the western Sephardic diaspora.'
Yosef Kaplan

'The first systematic study of the poor and poor relief in Sephardic Amsterdam . . . a pioneering work . . . based on a thorough grasp of all the archival and historical sources . . . convincingly shows that the poor made up an increasingly greater percentage of the population than previously thought . . . this major study of Dutch Jewry is highly recommended.' Harvey Sukenic, Association of Jewish Libraries Reviews
‘Explores and maps new territory in such an astonishingly thorough manner . . . a splendid example of prodigious research producing a result that illuminates an important aspect of a great Jewish community.’ Marc Saperstein, European Judaism

'I consider this to be one of the best and most important theses I have had the privilege of examining in my career and one of fundamental importance not just for early modern Dutch Jewish history but for all early modern Jewish history. I have no doubt at all that her book, which is well written and clearly set out, will be a landmark in Jewish historiography, an outstanding work of research which will at the same time be very widely referred to by Jewish historians of many different kinds. The book is also impressively erudite, showing a good working knowledge of virtually the entire primary and secondary published literature pertaining to the Portuguese Jewish community of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Amsterdam, whether in English, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, or Hebrew. No one has systematically researched the problem, dimensions, and history of poor relief in the Portuguese Jewish community of Amsterdam before, and Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld has carried out this task carefully, thoroughly, and convincingly. She has skillfully utilized the data she has extracted from the community records and other archival materials to expand and (in a number of cases) importantly correct our knowledge of the general demographic, organizational and financial history of the congregation. Since a majority of those in receipt of poor relief in the Amsterdam Sephardi community were female, the thesis also makes a relevant and notable contribution to the history of gender, and of the family, within a Jewish context.'
Jonathan Israel

Table of Contents

List of Figures

Note on Transliteration and Orthography

1 In the Beginning

Terminology: The Definition of Poverty • What Precisely Are We Trying to Establish? • Sources

2 Migration of the Poor

Introduction • Poor Relief and Admission Policy • Country of Origin • The Journey to Amsterdam from the Iberian Peninsula • The Journey from Other Centres • Emigration • Female Migration • The Migration Balance

3 Demographic Outline

Introduction • The Scope of Poor Relief • Financial Strength • Family Composition • Conclusion

4 Organization of Welfare

Introduction • The Theory: Modern Elements in a Traditional Approach • Poor Relief in Practice: Communal and Private • Conclusion

5 Financing Charity

The Public Sector • Reforms • The Private Sector • Conclusion

6 The Motives behind Charity

Charity Sustained by Piety • Inspiration in Action • The Family as the Main Object of Charity • Civic Sense and Charitable Gifts • Prestige • Social Concern and Mutual Responsibility • Conclusion

7 The Poor in Daily Life

Introduction • Housing • Work • Appeals for Help: Petitions • The Level of Poor Relief • Protest • Life on the Fringe • Conclusion: A Motley Crowd

8 Epilogue

Appendices

Tables

Four Key Figures

Glossary

Archives Consulted

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Poverty and Welfare Among the Portuguese Jews in Early Modern Amsterdam

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    A Hardback by Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld

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      View other formats and editions of Poverty and Welfare Among the Portuguese Jews in Early Modern Amsterdam by Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 05/07/2012
      ISBN13: 9781904113577, 978-1904113577
      ISBN10: 1904113575

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      National Jewish Book Awards Winner of the Mimi S. Frank Award in Memory of Becky Levy for Sephardic Culture, 2012.

      Early modern Amsterdam was a prosperous city renowned for its relative tolerance, and many people hoping for a better future, away from persecution, wars, and economic malaise, chose to make a new life there. Conversos and Jews from many countries were among them, attracted by the reputed wealth and benevolence of the Portuguese Jews who had settled there. Behind the facade of prosperity, however, poverty was a serious problem. It preoccupied the leadership of the Portuguese Jewish community and influenced its policy on admitting newcomers: the struggle to keep poverty under control and ensure that finances were available for welfare was paramount.

      Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld looks at poverty and welfare from the perspective of both benefactors and recipients. She analyses benefactors’ motives for philanthropy and charts its dimensions; she also examines the decision-making processes of communal bodies and private philanthropists, identifying the cultural influences that shaped their commitment to welfare. At the same time her detailed study succeeds in bringing the poor to life: she examines what brought them to Amsterdam, aspects of their daily life in the petitions they sent to the different welfare institutions, and the survival strategies offered by work, education, and charity. She also considers the related questions of social mobility and the motivation of the poor for joining the Amsterdam Portuguese community. Her research takes her, finally, beyond the margins of the established community to the small but active groups of Sephardi bandits who formed their own clandestine networks. Special attention is also paid to poor women, whether arriving alone or left behind and sometimes heading small family units, who were often singled out for relief. In this way the book makes a much-needed contribution to the study of gender, in Jewish society and more generally.

      This ground-breaking, multi-faceted study of the dynamics of the relationship between the rich and the poor adds a nuanced new dimension to our understanding of Jewish life in the early modern period.



      Trade Review
      'This volume offers the first systematic study of the poor and poor relief among the Sephardi Jews of early modern Amsterdam. It is a rich, thorough, and often touching exploration of the topic, and goes far in correcting the impression that all Jews in this community belonged to wealthy merchant families. Levie Bernfeld has given a voice to a largely silent but important population, in a work of meticulous scholarship.'
      Miriam Bodian

      'The wealthiest Jewish community in the early modern period has finally received a comprehensive and detailed study of its poor, based on a meticulous analysis of a broad variety of sources. Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld has painted a colourful and fascinating historical portrait of the poor and ordinary people of the Sephardic community of Amsterdam, with their social and cultural profile, their distress, and the ways that the community leadership and its social elite dealt with their disturbing presence. This is one of the most important contributions in recent years to historical research on Dutch Jewry as well as on the western Sephardic diaspora.'
      Yosef Kaplan

      'The first systematic study of the poor and poor relief in Sephardic Amsterdam . . . a pioneering work . . . based on a thorough grasp of all the archival and historical sources . . . convincingly shows that the poor made up an increasingly greater percentage of the population than previously thought . . . this major study of Dutch Jewry is highly recommended.' Harvey Sukenic, Association of Jewish Libraries Reviews
      ‘Explores and maps new territory in such an astonishingly thorough manner . . . a splendid example of prodigious research producing a result that illuminates an important aspect of a great Jewish community.’ Marc Saperstein, European Judaism

      'I consider this to be one of the best and most important theses I have had the privilege of examining in my career and one of fundamental importance not just for early modern Dutch Jewish history but for all early modern Jewish history. I have no doubt at all that her book, which is well written and clearly set out, will be a landmark in Jewish historiography, an outstanding work of research which will at the same time be very widely referred to by Jewish historians of many different kinds. The book is also impressively erudite, showing a good working knowledge of virtually the entire primary and secondary published literature pertaining to the Portuguese Jewish community of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Amsterdam, whether in English, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, or Hebrew. No one has systematically researched the problem, dimensions, and history of poor relief in the Portuguese Jewish community of Amsterdam before, and Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld has carried out this task carefully, thoroughly, and convincingly. She has skillfully utilized the data she has extracted from the community records and other archival materials to expand and (in a number of cases) importantly correct our knowledge of the general demographic, organizational and financial history of the congregation. Since a majority of those in receipt of poor relief in the Amsterdam Sephardi community were female, the thesis also makes a relevant and notable contribution to the history of gender, and of the family, within a Jewish context.'
      Jonathan Israel

      Table of Contents

      List of Figures

      Note on Transliteration and Orthography

      1 In the Beginning

      Terminology: The Definition of Poverty • What Precisely Are We Trying to Establish? • Sources

      2 Migration of the Poor

      Introduction • Poor Relief and Admission Policy • Country of Origin • The Journey to Amsterdam from the Iberian Peninsula • The Journey from Other Centres • Emigration • Female Migration • The Migration Balance

      3 Demographic Outline

      Introduction • The Scope of Poor Relief • Financial Strength • Family Composition • Conclusion

      4 Organization of Welfare

      Introduction • The Theory: Modern Elements in a Traditional Approach • Poor Relief in Practice: Communal and Private • Conclusion

      5 Financing Charity

      The Public Sector • Reforms • The Private Sector • Conclusion

      6 The Motives behind Charity

      Charity Sustained by Piety • Inspiration in Action • The Family as the Main Object of Charity • Civic Sense and Charitable Gifts • Prestige • Social Concern and Mutual Responsibility • Conclusion

      7 The Poor in Daily Life

      Introduction • Housing • Work • Appeals for Help: Petitions • The Level of Poor Relief • Protest • Life on the Fringe • Conclusion: A Motley Crowd

      8 Epilogue

      Appendices

      Tables

      Four Key Figures

      Glossary

      Archives Consulted

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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